Hill’s of Lower Dominick Street

TOM kenny Galway Advertiser, Wed, Sep 19, 2018

This photograph, dated 1905, was part of an advertisement for Hill & Co Cycle Makers and for Hill’s Dublin Studio, a photographic gallery. Both of these were located in this building in Lower Dominick Street. You have to hand it to Edmund Hill, he was a dab hand at publicity, and advertised extensively.

His photographic studio was patronised by their Royal Highnesses the Duke of Connaught and the late Duke of Edinburgh (Saxe Coburg and Gotha ), Lords Killanin, Wallscourt, Coleridge, etc, and “our patrons range from the Royal Family to the peasant”. He sold photographs from stamp size (a shilling a dozen ) to life size. He was “an authority on children, his photographs of them were awarded first place against all competitors”. “To be in the fashion was to pay his studio a visit.”

He had a very large bicycle showroom: “You have four grades to select from, and value for value. They are the correct thing and want a lot of beating.”

“If you possess an old machine, we can make it like new again. We teach you to ride one on the premises. Special terms to apprentices.”

He claimed to have introduced the motor bicycle, tricycle, and car to Galway. The Galtee More would cost you £12 or 21s 8d a month; The Pride of Connaught £10 or 18s 4d a month; The Star of the West £8 or 15s a month. They built these motorbikes which could travel five to 40 miles an hour. “Made in Galway. Guaranteed in Galway. Hundreds sold. Ask their owners.”